In python, when you install stuff with pip, it is recommended to use a venv, to avoid breaking dependencies for a program when uninstalling another one, or when two programs need two different versions of the same dependence.
I was wondering if with Rust is the same, or if Cargo manages it all on its own (kind of like apt does), and I shouldn’t care about it.
Also since I know Linux kernel is using some Rust, isn’t there a risk of breaking my system if I uninstall a program that need some deps that the system itsel needs?
It’s not necessary for Rust, no.
This is only a problem for Python because of a design flaw, one which Rust did not copy.
Rust is very different to Python and Cargo is very different to apt.
When you build your rust/Cargo project it compiles all the dependencies specified in Cargo.toml into a single executable.
That executable (with some exceptions) can then be run without any dependencies. You don’t even need Rust or cargo installed. Therefore the Rust running in the kernel is entirely isolated from whatever your Rust app is doing.
There’s no need for virtual environments etc
Every rust project is basically it’s own venv out of the box.
Typically rust programs are statically linked, meaning the executable contains all the dependencies needed to run it, with the exception of libc, unless you’re using musl. So no dependency worries basically.
Probably wise to install something like cargo-cleaner (on crates.io). Those target/ folders in rust projects can get pretty big.
No, you don’t need to do that.
All the source code of your dependencies are stored in
~/.cargo/registry
^1. Which doesn’t lead to conflicts.And the compiled versions are stored in the
target/
directory in your project directory^2, so there’s no conflict there.1: that is configurable with
CARGO_HOME
, I have that set to~/.cache/cargo
2: That is configurable with the
build.target-dir
option. I have that set to~/.cache/cargo/target
so that build artifacts don’t end up in my backups :)You don’t need to worry about that in rust. Cargo is built from the ground up to understand package versions and downloads/builds the right versions for each project. The global package caches understand versions and can cache multiple versions of each package. Where as python just uses one or more global stores of packages shared by all projects.
venv
is basically there to isolated these package stores along with the version of python which can have breaking changes between different releases (this is something rust avoids at all costs so you can upgrade it without worrying as much as with python).My god this is so fucking clever and so fucking good to hear!!